Edwin Brock

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Edwin Brock (born October 19, 1927 in Dulwich, Metropolitan Borough of Camberwell, London; died in 1997) was a British poet. Following two years that he spent in the Royal Navy shortly after the end of the Second World War he wrote Five Ways to Kill a Man, an emotionless poem highlighting stupid deaths, the harshness of war and the increasing loss of humanity, as shown in the distance between the killer and the victim (needing to touch him in the first stanza, and not needing to know who he is in stanzas 4-5)

[edit] Titles

Brock has authored over a dozen poetry collections, a novel and an autobiography.

  • An Attempt at Exorcism (poetry collection, 1959)
  • The Little White God (novel, 1962)
  • Here, Now, Always (autobiography, 1977)

[edit] References

Languages